Interaction Protocols for Human-Driven Crisis Resolution Processes - Risks and Resilience of Collaborative Networks
Conference Papers Year : 2015

Interaction Protocols for Human-Driven Crisis Resolution Processes

Éric Andonoff
  • Function : Author
  • PersonId : 1054761
  • IdRef : 179444913
Chihab Hanachi
  • Function : Author
  • PersonId : 980773
  • IdRef : 155258354
Nguyen Le Tuan Thanh
Christophe Sibertin-Blanc

Abstract

This work aims at providing a crisis cell with process-oriented tools to manage crisis resolutions. Indeed, the crisis cell members have to define the crisis resolution process, adapt it to face crisis evolutions, and guide its execution. Crisis resolution processes are interaction-intensive processes: they not only coordinate the performance of tasks to be undertaken on the impacted world, but they also support regulatory interactions between possibly geographically distributed crisis cell members. In order to deal with such an interweaving, this paper proposes to use Interaction Protocols to both model formal interactions and ease a cooperative adaptation and guidance of crisis resolution processes. After highlighting the benefits of Interaction Protocols to support this human and collective dimension, the paper presents a protocol meta-model for their specification. It then shows how to suitably integrate specified protocols into crisis resolution processes and how to implement this conceptual framework into a service oriented architecture.
Fichier principal
Vignette du fichier
370605_1_En_6_Chapter.pdf (332.44 Ko) Télécharger le fichier
Origin Files produced by the author(s)
Loading...

Dates and versions

hal-01437933 , version 1 (17-01-2017)

Licence

Identifiers

Cite

Éric Andonoff, Chihab Hanachi, Nguyen Le Tuan Thanh, Christophe Sibertin-Blanc. Interaction Protocols for Human-Driven Crisis Resolution Processes. 16th Working Conference on Virtual Enterprises (PROVE), Oct 2015, Albi, France. pp.63-76, ⟨10.1007/978-3-319-24141-8_6⟩. ⟨hal-01437933⟩
116 View
163 Download

Altmetric

Share

More